The Upside: 2026 tax season – Simplified
Does the thought of filing your taxes make you a little stressed? You’re not alone. Join Michelle Munro, Director of Tax & Retirement Research, as she walks investors through what actually matters this tax season and the steps you need to take before the April 30 deadline.
Michelle will break down key tax considerations, common mistakes to avoid and timely strategies investors may want to think about before filing.
Transcript
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Subtitles are AI-Generated.
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Welcome to The Upside. I'm Jordan Chevalier.
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With tax season now in full swing Canadians may be wondering how best
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to approach the filing process.
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Joining me today to share her top tax tips and which common mistakes you
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can avoid is Fidelity Director of Tax and Retirement Research,
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Michelle Munro. Michelle, it's great to have you.
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Great to be here, Jordan. Thanks for having me.
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Let's start with the big burning question, when are personal taxes due this
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year?
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Okay, quick hit.
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Thursday, April 30th, taxes are due.
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Thursday, so you're going to get it done before the weekend.
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Now, if you are self-employed, or married to a self- employed individual,
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have a self-unemployed spouse, you have until June 15th to get those
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taxes done but you still have to pay your taxes if you have any owing
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by April 30.
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All that is you really want to have it pretty much done by the end of April.
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End of day on April 30th, that's a good deadline to circle on the calendar.
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Gotta get 'em done. Or sooner. You don't want to leave it to the last minute
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because it is stressful for some people.
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That's a good note. I have a question here, people generally think of taxes and
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they say, I got a big tax return, look at all this money I got.
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Why should people be reframing that, is there another way to think about it?
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You're thinking, yay, I got a tax refund, yeah.
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But you actually, I don't want to damper anyone's excitement,
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you actually gave an interest-free loan to the government.
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Maybe you may not want to do that.
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On the flip side, if you owe taxes, well, that's
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you received an interest-free loan from the government.
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There are different ways of looking at it.
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Now, what usually causes a big refund?
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If someone says, well, I get a big refund every year, and Michelle is telling
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me that big refund might not necessarily be the best, how do we
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get that refund down closer to zero.
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Most Canadians are employees, they have T4
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income, withholdings at source, going to the government to cover
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off their estimated taxes.
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How they would get their taxes below that, typically is because they
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have some sort of deduction or tax credit.
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Some of the common deductions are Registered Retirement Savings Plan
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contribution, getting a deduction for that.
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Maybe a First Home Savings Account, getting a deduction for that,
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What else do we have, RRSP, maybe
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we have over withholding by our employer.
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We might have childcare cost deductions for
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credits, maybe medical expense credit, student
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tuition credits.
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What else, donation credits as well.
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There's quite a long list.
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So there are things that people can do to look at it if they always get a big
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credit to kind of move through and get that.
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I would actually suggest going through the tax return line by line and
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thinking, hey, does that apply to me?
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I think most software is pretty good now asking these questions, did
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you make any donation contributions?
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That covers if someone gets a very big refund.
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What if someone owes? The other side of the coin.
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If somebody owes to the government, maybe they don't have the cash right away,
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they weren't expecting to owe, what should they do?
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It can be a bit of a panic but what should they do?
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It is. That's why I always want to encourage people to
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at least start their taxes sooner rather than later so you
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have that peace of mind. Well, you're getting a refund, now you're going to
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speed it up and get your tax return in as quickly as possible.
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But if you owe money, well, file by the deadline
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because if you are late filing and owe money
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there's interest and penalties for late filing.
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The second part of that through our hypothetical scenario,
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well, we're filing and we owe money but we don't have
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that cash. Well, should we turtle and like go, ah?
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No. File on time because
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then you're not late and then call the CRA and say, well, this is
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how I plan to attack it.
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They have collections agents who will help you come up with a plan.
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That's interesting because some people, you know, maybe myself included, can
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think of the CRA as a little bit hard to reach and maybe there's there's no
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point in calling. But you're saying there are people there that can help you.
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There are sort of a payment plan process that you can go through over at the
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CRA.
Yeah, and just explain the situation and how you want to rectify it.
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Okay, that's very helpful.
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How can people also reduce future taxes?
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Let's say that this tax year has come and gone, people are looking ahead to
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next year, what are some of the reduction strategies people can
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employ?
Where we see it most common is that the employee situation,
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there's withholding, meanwhile, I'm making an RRSP contribution.
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It kind of feels good. At the end of the year I file my tax return, I
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get a big tax refund because of that RRSP contribution but
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it might have been better if I could reduce the withholding from my
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employer so then I would have more money in my
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pocket all year round. I could invest that.
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I could increase my lifestyle, what have you.
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To get that reduced withholding at source,
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employer source, we need to file a form.
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It's called a T21, sorry T1213.
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I had to peek. You
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complete that and you submit that to your employer and that gives
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them the certification to reduce withholding.
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That's very, very helpful. The three sort of major personal tax vehicles that
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people can put money into, you think of the FHSA, the TFSA
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and the RRSP, those are the three big ones that people can open.
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What are the differences there and when might someone want to prioritize one
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over the other. It's a big question.
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The reason I'm laughing is because we throw around all these acronyms
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in the industry so let's just simplify it a little bit.
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Let's start with Registered Retirement Savings Plan,
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RRSP, intended for retirement.
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It's also the one that's been around the longest.
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Make a contribution. You get a deduction for that contribution, so we
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say it's made with pre-tax dollars.
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Now, inside our RRSP we can invest, inside our RRSP, mutual
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funds, exchange traded funds, stocks, bonds, what have
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you. The earnings on those investments inside the
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RRSP are tax-deferred.
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Typically, when you're making a withdrawal in retirement,
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we make that withdrawal, then it's taxable.
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Tax deduction, deferred earnings, taxable
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withdrawal, RRSP.
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Tax Free Savings Account, second most popular one, it
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came in about 2009 so quite a while ago
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but still relatively new.
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We make a contribution to our TFSA, we don't get
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a tax deduction for that.
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But then inside our TFSA we can invest in all
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the same investments.
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All the earnings inside the TFSA are tax-free.
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We can make a withdrawal from our TFSA, it's tax-free as well.
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It's also more flexible.
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Let's say I need to take $1,000 out of my TFSA in 2026,
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I could re-contribute that in 2027, in a later year.
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There's a lot more flexibility with that.
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You need to be 18 to be able to open an account and there's limits.
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The last one is the First Home Savings Account, FHSA.
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The FHSA is intended for first-time home buyers.
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You have to meet certain criteria.
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Make a contribution to that, get a deduction for the
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contribution. Now, inside the account, same thing,
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mutual funds, ETFs, stocks and bonds.
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They will grow on a tax-free basis.
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When it comes time to buy a home, that first home, again,
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we have to meet certain criteria, that withdrawal is tax-free.
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The first Home Savings Account really combines the best
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of the RRSP, we're getting a deduction for our contribution,
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and we get a tax-free withdrawal for
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a qualified withdrawal from our First Home-Savings Account, the best
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of both. That was a long explanation.
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Your real question is, well, which is best?
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I'm here, I've got a couple dollars to throw in.
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What do I do?
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Well, it depends.
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If you already own a home you're probably not going to qualify for
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that First Home Savings Account so now you're down to a TFSA or an
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RRSP. Then I'm going to want to know are you
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saving for the future, for your retirement, or is this
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something like I'm saving for a rainy day, maybe vacation,
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two years down the road, something like that, so you want the TFSA, the
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flexibility that comes with that.
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I think most young investors who have not purchased a home
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yet, who are just getting started, would benefit from the First Home
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Savings Account because they're going to get that deduction,
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grow on a tax-deferred basis, make a withdrawal tax-free.
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I should also point out, talking about the deduction sometimes for young
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investors, maybe they're in a lower tax bracket today.
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They can make the contribution, let's say in 2026, but they don't have
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to make that deduction in 2026.
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They could claim that deduction in a later year.
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When we would do this is when we're in a higher tax bracket, so
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get a better tax benefit for that tax deduction.
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Michelle, is there any advantage if someone is saying, listen, I'm not thinking
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about buying a home this year or maybe in the next year but is there an
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advantage to opening up an FHSA or a TFSA and just letting it
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sit maybe with some minor sort of investments here and there?
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Great question. There's a nuance.
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Taxes are sometimes complicated.
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Ask questions. Listen to a podcast or a videocast like this.
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Let's start with the Tax Free Savings Account.
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As soon as you turn 18, so you turn 18 in
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2026, $7,000 of contribution room.
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If you don't open it, if you don't contribute to that, well, it will
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continue to grow. Let's say next year you can get caught
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up, $7,000 for this year plus whatever the new contribution
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is for 2027.
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There's flexibility there.
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First Home Savings Account, I'm sorry, don't shoot the messenger.
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It's a little more complicated.
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Here it is, you have to actually open the account and
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if you meet all the criteria, basically a first time homebuyer, a Canadian
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resident, et cetera, over age 18, as soon
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as you open the account, you have to open it at the financial institution,
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then you have $8,000 contribution room
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per year. In 2026 you open it, you don't have the cash
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to make the contribution but you do in 2027, you can get caught
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up in 2027.
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FHSA, you have to open the account even if you can't
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contribute to it.
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Very helpful nuance. There's some flexibility in sort of both areas there
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between the two tax vehicles.
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What if you are a student, let's say you're a student you're filing for the
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first time and you look at your annual income and it's only a
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couple thousand. Let's say you made maybe 7,000 or 8,000 on the year and you
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think, well, that's not worth it to file taxes.
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What should you do?
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You know you're below the basic personal credit, you know
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you're not going to owe taxes, plus you have tuition credits that you might be
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able to claim, maybe there's student loan interest you can claim against that,
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the list goes on.
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The question you're asking is, well, I know I'm not going to owe any taxes,
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should I file my tax return?
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The short answer is yes because RRSP
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contribution room is based on earned income.
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In our example we had $7,000, $8,000 of employment income, even
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though you may not be contributing to your RRSP you're going
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to be earning that contribution room which later on, future
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you is going to thank you for.
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As well, there's credits that are available.
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The biggest one I'm thinking of is the GST credit but there's other ones as
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well. I know when you're a student especially it's nice to be getting
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that quarterly cheque.
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Makes going out to the pub a little bit more fun.
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It sounds like the sort of overarching theme here is to get what you can do
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and do it early and sort of do it often and just get these kind of mechanisms
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running. Even if you're not taking full advantage it's still important to
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open them up and have them there for the future.
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Opening up our First Home Savings Account, if you have some
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funds, thinking about First Home Savings Account, TFSA, as well
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you want to be organized. Start those tax returns, we can get
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into the system, start accruing that RRSP contribution room,
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as well we might qualify for some credits as well.
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That's amazing. Michelle, before we wrap things up let's go through one final
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checklist here, things that people can be looking at.
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They're getting ready to do their tax return, they've watched the webcast, they
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feel informed, what do you want to leave the audience with?
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First of all, let's accumulate all those tax slips.
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Do you have a T4 slip, co you have any investment slips, a T3, a T5
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slip, investment income, so looking at all the income.
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Then we want to look for our deductions and credits.
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The common deductions are RRSP, First Home Savings Account,
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maybe childcare deductions.
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Maybe we have credits, medical, donations, tuition credits
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for students, accumulate it all.
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Go through the tax returns line by line.
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It will take 15 minutes maybe.
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Also you have a sense of, well, have I really captured everything?
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Compare it to last year's return as well.
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As well, most software asks lots of probing good questions to
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help you complete it.
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Now sort of March, April timeframe, this isn't really
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the tax planning time.
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This is where we just want to complete our return, get it done, get it into
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the system, get our refunds or make a payment where
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we're able if we have to.
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Tax planning, thinking about these things, we've touched on a
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fair bit, this is really a year-round activity.
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So you have to have me back, Jordan.
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That's right. We'll have you back, we can go into tax planning so that everyone
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is well prepared to go into filing season in the
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March and April period. Michelle, it was very nice to hear from you and thanks
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again for coming on the show.
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Great to be here. Thanks for having me.
15:24.356 --> 15:28.427
Just a reminder that The Upside webcasts do air daily so keep an eye on your
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Apple podcasts. Thanks again for watching.
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I hope you'll join us next time on the Upside.
15:48.347 --> 15:49.315
I'm Jordan Chevalier.
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